![]() Organization admins can open Group Policy and navigate to "Computer Configuration > Administrative Templates > Windows Components > News and interests > Enable news and interests on the taskbar" in order to enable or disable the News and Interest widget. Hoping there will be a way via Group Policy to avoid it completely.EDIT: Per Neowin, there will be Group Policy control available:"Microsoft will also allow organizations to control the News and Interest feature. If I had to guess, even when disabled, there will be a service running in the background collecting that data.No, I'm not cynical at all.Understand you can hide it. developing or enhancing profiles of users based on what "news and interests" they watch or have. This has to be about ads and gathering telemetry metrics – i.e. And customization appears limited to opting out rather than opting in. Here is the Download link for you Memu Play Website. Step 1: Download and Install MemuPlay on your PC. Also some UK papers, but not the Economist. Now we will see how to Download Newsflow for PC Windows 11 or 10 or 8 or 7 laptop using MemuPlay. No Economist, no Los Angeles Times (indeed, no West Coast newspaper, not even the Seattle Post-Intelligencer), no Reuters, no AP, no UPI.It does have Politico, The Hill, Washington Post, New York Times, The Week, and US News & World Report, so there is something, just not my preferred sources.IOW, I consider this rubbish because I can't ENTER my own sources, I can only use what MSFT provides (which appears to be SQUAT ALL for outside the US, quelle surpise!), so my speculation that MSFT gets paid to be included as a source seems more likely.ADDED: if I go into Edge, there are more sources, including LA Times, Reuters, AP and some other West Coast papers. I clicked through all its news/interests providers until it wrapped back to the beginning, and it doesn't show my own top news sites. I just activated it to see what it provides. The documentaries often have disclaimers at the end of the show saying some muddled thing. ![]() Broder laughed as if this was old fashioned.as a former nature documentary lover I’m amazed at how many ‘nature’ documentaries are now more about the cameraman or ‘scientist’ than the environment they’re filming, as well as how many now have staged scenes or different events spliced together to convey the agenda. I don’t know if it’s coming from the journalism schools or growing naturally, but few seem to able to just tell the story as it happened.I remember more than a decade ago when print reporter Johnny Apple passed, the esteemed David Broder said Apple was one of the few journalists he knew who just wanted tell people what happened, not why it happened. In reply to Drew Neilson:Reporters, biographers, and documentarians all have agendas now.
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